How to Homebrew Hard Lemonade + Homebrewed Hard Lemonade Recipe

I’m a strong believer in having a non-beer option on tap as part of my homebrew lineup. I like to make homebrew tasting a large part of the experience of visiting my home, and I think that having a non-beer option is a great way to avoid excluding people who don’t drink beer from the experience. Even beer lovers will enjoy a glass of this light, refreshing hard lemonade!

I brewed all of the beer for my best friend’s wedding this summer, which is an awesome experience for any homebrewer! We decided that we needed to have a non-beer option on tap for those at the wedding who wanted an alcoholic beverage but did not drink beer. We had discussed doing a cider, but some of my ciders have turned out really well and others have…not. I’m still working on getting my cider dialed in, but until then I needed something that was less of a gamble. We finally settled on a hard lemonade. My thinking was that it was light, sweet, and easy to drink, and that the final product will be backsweetened with  enough lemon juice and sugar that it would be forgiving in case it didn’t turn out with the exact flavor I was looking for. 

I was pretty surprised to find that there are not a ton of homebrew recipes out there for hard lemonade. Several people recommended Skeeter Pee to me, but after looking at the recipes I was worried about the high ABV (8-9%) which is a dangerous thing to bring to a wedding. I pulled together all of the recipes I could and made some changes to them to hit a flavor and ABV closer to what I was shooting for (about 5%, light, and not overly sweet). Here’s what I came up with!

Five (5) Gallon Batch of Homebrewed Hard Lemonade Recipe:

Homebrew Hard Lemonade Brew Day:

I used bottled purified water so that I didn’t need to boil and cool the full 5 gallons, which made brew day EXTREMELY easy. It added a couple of dollars to the batch cost, but it was still super cheap to make. If you are using tap water, I recommend boiling the full 4.5 gallons of water with the sugar and lemon juice.

If you’re using purified water, then you just need to boil about ½-¾ gallons of water with about ⅓ of a bottle of lemon juice and the full 4 lbs of sugar. Because of the small volume, I didn’t even use my brew kettle or other gear. I just made it in my kitchen with a medium sized pot. Because of the low price of ingredients, easy process, and little equipment required, this is a great recipe for new brewers to try.

First, heat up the sugar solution fairly slowly to avoid scorching the sugar and keep it at a low boil for a few minutes to make sure it’s sterile. 

While it is boiling, sanitize your fermenter I used a Big Mouth Bubbler from Northern Brewer for easy pouring/cleaning/racking, which I highly recommend.

Carefully cool the boiled sugar solution using your preferred method. Because it’s so little volume, I just put a lid on the pan and used an ice bath in the sink, which worked perfectly. 

While the sugar solution is cooling, carefully dump the following into the fermenter, making sure not to introduce any foreign substance that could infect the must:

Pour the cooled sugar syrup into the fermenter, and fill the fermenter with more sterile water until you have 4 ¾ gallons. Take a gravity reading so that you can calculate your ABV later. My original gravity came in at 1.041. You can adjust the sugar to hit whatever OG you’d like to start with. 

Check the temperature and make sure it is in the range for the yeast. EC-1118 is very temperature tolerant, so you should be ok to ferment at room temperature. I fermented in the low-mid 70s and had no issues. Rehydrate the yeast according to the instructions on the yeast packet and pitch into the fermenter. Seal it with an airlock, put it in a nice dark place and wait for it to start to ferment!

Because the lemonade is so acidic, it is difficult for the yeast to get going and takes a little longer than beer. Give it about 24-36 hours before you start to worry too much. Mine didn’t take off after 2 days, so I pitched another pack of EC-1118 directly into the fermenter and it took off within another day. Fermentation is fairly slow and doesn’t create a krausen, so give it 2-3 weeks in the fermenter, checking every day or two for airlock activity. 

Homebrew Hard Lemonade Fermentation and Stabilization

After you haven’t had any airlock activity for several days, do a gravity reading to make sure it fermented dry. My FG was 0.996. 

If you didn’t have any issues with fermenting, go ahead and keg the lemonade. If you don’t keg, jump down a few paragraphs to the bottling instructions). Crush up 2 tablets of Potassium Metabisulfite and add them to the lemonade, close the keg, purge the headspace with Co2 a couple of times, and wait 24 hours. 

After 24 hours, add 2.5 tsp of Potassium Sorbate, purge the headspace again and wait another 24 hours.

Backsweetening Homebrewed Hard Lemonade

Let it sit for a day or so to make sure the yeast has been rendered inert before backsweetening. Add the last bottle of lemon juice and 2 lbs of white sugar into a small pan and slowly bring it to a boil, being careful not to scorch it.

Kegging Homebrewed Hard Lemonade

Once it has boiled for a couple of minutes, carefully pour it into the keg. Purge the headspace a couple of times again and seal the keg. Shake the sealed keg well to mix in the sugar syrup, and then it’s ready to go into your kegerator to carbonate. I just carbonated it slowly at about 10-12 psi, which worked perfectly for it.

Enjoy! After about 5-7 days, it’s carbonated, cold, and delicious on a hot summer day! 

Bottling Homebrewed Hard Lemonade

If you don’t keg, this is where things get a little complicated. When you bottle beer as a homebrewer, you rely on the yeast to carbonate your beer in the bottles by adding a small amount of sugar and letting it ferment in the sealed bottle, which produces Co2 that carbonates the beer. The problem with this is that because we’re adding sugar and lemon juice to sweeten and flavor the lemonade, you’ll end up with bottle bombs if you don’t pasteurize the bottles after a few days. I don’t recommend this, as it can be a dangerous process and the results vary a lot.

You have a few choices if you’re determined to bottle the lemonade:

  • Backsweeten, bottle, wait a few days, pasteurize. I don’t recommend this. 
  • If you like the flavor of the lemonade right out of the fermenter (unsweetened, with less of a lemonade flavor), you can go ahead and bottle it as-is. It will be still (uncarbonated) and unsweetened. When you open a bottle, you can mix it with some non-alcoholic lemonade, but this to me defeats the purpose of having brewed it in the first place.
  • If you want it carbonated but not sweetened, you can skip the stabilization process above and use priming sugar to bottle just like you would with a beer.
  • If you want it sweetened but not carbonated (this is probably what I recommend overall if you can’t keg), then follow the stabilization process above, then sweeten, and then bottle. Even though we have hopefully stopped all of the yeast from reproducing, I would recommend cold crashing the bottles and keeping them cold as you drink them to avoid any accidental glass explosions. Having been woken up by a case of homebrew exploding all over my kitchen, I can tell you it’s not worth it!

Using Non-Fermentable Sweeteners

There is one other option for those who want to bottle a carbonated and sweetened hard lemonade: non-fermentable sweeteners. Use of a non-fermentable sweetener allows you to use fermentable priming sugar to carbonate in the bottle without the fear of excessive refermentation creating bottle bombs. There are several options for both natural and artificial non-fermentable sweeteners that can be used in cider with varying effects:

  • Xylitol/Erythritol are naturally occuring sugar alcohols, which are often derived from corn cobs or birch. Sugar alcohols, and Xylitol in particular, are considered to be the best non-fermentable sugar for sweetening cider because it leaves the least aftertaste and sweetens the most similarly to sugar. Use about 3 tbsp per gallon for a semi-dry lemonade, or up to 9tbsp for a sweet lemonade. Use caution, though, because sugar alcohols can have a laxative effect, especially in larger quantities. Xylitol is also extremely toxic to dogs! Make sure your four-legged assistant brewers are kept away from both the xylitol during the brewing process and from the resulting lemonade.
  • Stevia is a naturally-derived sugar substitute that is very sweet, but not quite the same type of sweet as sugar. It works better than lactose or artificial sweeteners, but not as well as Xylitol in my opinion. Stevia comes in both powder and liquid drops, and either works fine as a non-fermentable sweetener for lemonade. 
  • Lactose, sugar derived from cow’s milk, is a non-fermentable sugar more commonly used in beer. It is not very sweet compared to sugar, so it takes a large quantity of lactose to sweeten a lemonade. Lactose changes the mouthfeel of the lemonade more than the sweetness, which is generally undesirable (think milk and lemonade together – yuck). Definitely don’t add more than a pound of lactose to a five-gallon batch of lemonade, or you’ll notice some serious off flavors. 
  • Artificial sweeteners, such as aspartame, saccharin, and sucralose, are not recommended. They impart a bitter, unpleasant aftertaste, and the health concerns associated with artificial sweeteners outweigh the benefits of using them in a lemonade. There are plenty of other choices, so avoid these! 

One great thing about these sweeteners is that you can test them in advance. Bottle a small batch of carbonated but unsweetened lemonade and allow it to condition. Once it’s ready, you can slowly add sweetener to taste in a pint glass and once you have found the desired flavor and sweetness, you can scale it up for your next batch before bottling. 

I ended up being extremely happy with this recipe. Everyone at the wedding loved it, and we kicked two kegs without a problem. I’m already planning another batch with some of my homegrown blackberries added. We’ll see how it turns out!

Give it a try and let us know in the comments below how it turns out!

Thanks for Reading!

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Responses

  1. I realize this is an old post. I’m new to brewing and do not have a keg set-up. If I were to make the hard lemonade and backsweeten with a non-fermentable sweetener (xylitol), would I also add the suggested additional 32oz of lemon juice?

    Then, I’d just add priming sugar for carbonating in the bottle?
    Thank you!

    1. Good question! Yes, definitely still add the extra 32oz of lemon juice when backsweetening. A lot of the lemon flavor gets lost in fermentation so that last kick of flavor when sweetening makes a huge difference! As long as you have no sugar in the lemon juice and the sugar is nonfermentable, you should be able to use priming sugar to carbonate the bottles like you normally would. Lemonade is a harsh environment for the yeast, so you may not get as good of carbonation as you would with beer. That said, the hard lemonade is great when it’s lightly carbonated.

      Let us know how it turns out!

      1. This is really helpful. Thank you! I’ll report back…
        Interesting – I have the same lemon juice that you used and the label says it contains sulfates. But it looks like it worked for you!